Janet Stovall: How to get serious about diversity and inclusion in the workplace
UPS's Janet Stovall has developed a business approach that addresses corporate racism head-on -- and has created methods to help dismantle it. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
what the question is,
whatever it is she's single-minded about.
got any plans for the 4th of July?"
I'm going to binge-watch 'Roots.'"
I've got a joke for you:
is not just caring about something.
to do something about it.
it is moving your feet.
about racism is because I know
at Davidson College
black Davidson on the other side,
on the white side of the tracks,
in downtown and asked for ID,
that didn't take too long,
only 52 of us were black.
just a challenge to Davidson:
to say that if you don't do this,
your commitment to diversity.
single-minded about racism, too.
for all the change that came after it.
happiest people on the planet that day,
or multiracial professors,
Africana Studies Department.
because what it taught me
in single-mindedness.
companies in the world.
and predominantly male,
is, it's very personal.
in deep conversation
turn to diversity and inclusion,
happy to talk about.
of these conversations,
is in a position to do something
in the United States
on a regular basis,
is "the most segregated hour" in America.
in the US workforce alone --
and having to show up to get it.
is bigger than race,
is the most prominent form,
the absolute best at it.
and inclusive environments
to do something with?
one-third of our lives at work,
who didn't look like us?
a totally different place outside of work.
gets single-minded about racism.
How is that supposed to happen?
that business can borrow from Project '87:
for business -- yet.
it's the right thing to do,
to make the case
and customer insight.
it's kind of a no-brainer,
a smoke alarm going off
on the hot door,
that your house is on fire.
33 percent better than the norm.
enjoy 24 percent higher revenue growth.
in the Fortune 500.
of getting a callback on your resume
the fact that by 2045,
a minority-majority country.
as it stands today,
is going to get single-minded
and relative to somebody
wouldn't it make sense
the people that work for you?
base should be 13 percent Black
the population looks like.
your customer base looks like.
are not the same things.
some slightly different numbers.
that research shows
actually begin to be heard.
real numbers to fix it,
to set real numbers,
about diversity and inclusion.
and don't come up with their numbers,
maybe we give them some training.
those numbers eventually,
about diversity and inclusion,
we hold back an incentive or two.
the best disincentive is?
want accountability,
don't do what you're accountable for.
of all colors and all races
of the corporate ladder;
indeed, expected --
authentic selves to work every day,
is both recognized and respected.
we learn about diversity at work
think and say outside of work.
if we all work together
praying for change to happen
our feet to making it.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Janet Stovall - Inclusion advocate, speechwriterUPS's Janet Stovall has developed a business approach that addresses corporate racism head-on -- and has created methods to help dismantle it.
Why you should listen
As one of only a handful of Black students on campus at Davidson College in North Carolina in the mid-80s, Janet Stovall witnessed racism and exclusion firsthand. Rather than retreating, this experience inspired Stovall to explore and initiate difficult conversations about race. By graduation, she had devised a plan to kickstart diversity initiatives that even now is recognized and referenced as the catalyst for changes that created a more diverse and inclusive Davidson. As an executive communications expert, Stovall has developed a business approach that addresses corporate racism head-on and has created methods to help dismantle it. At UPS, she is the primary speechwriter for the CEO and other senior leaders.
Stovall is working towards a Master's degree in integrated marketing communications from Georgetown University. In her spare time, she's exploring how people of color navigate predominately white colleges and corporate America, and the cultural and culinary links between past and present people of the African Diaspora.
Janet Stovall | Speaker | TED.com